![]() Here is some more information about this topic. In some cases, you will not be able to use the Fancontrol script due to incompatible cooling architecture (e.g. Some laptops have two fans for CPU and GPU, but the first fan cools down CPU and GPU at the same time, while the other one cools CPU only. Some laptops have single fan for both CPU and GPU and cools both at the same time. It makes no sense, but it worked for me.Note: Laptop users should be aware about how cooling system works in their hardware. With all of the back to "DISABLED", I still had the lower temps (about 60C). Then I set them back to DISABLED one at a time, trying to find which one made the difference. I set them to AUTO and the temps dropped. I had the options all DISABLED initially, and had high temps after upgrade to 2204. I have no explanation for why this helped. Reboot to Windows and check your PCH temperatures. Change all items in Step #3 to "DISABLED".ħ. Restart and enter BIOS again, go to same page.Ħ. Set all the following to "AUTO": DMI Link ASPM Control, ASPM, L1 Substates, DMI ASPM, DMI Gen3 ASPM, PEG - ASPM.ĥ. (Keep this disabled, or you'll have lots of WHEA errors.)ģ. ![]() Set PCI Express Native Power Managment to DISABLED. Go to bios page Advanced\Platform Misc Configuration.Ģ. I had high idle PCH temps (69-71C) after loading bios 2204. Another question, my asus rog strix z690-e gaming wifi board has a chipset temperature of 65º Celsius at idle and 83º while playing, is it too much? I think I'll put a fan oriented to the chitpset
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